Date: Fri 17-Jan-1997
Date: Fri 17-Jan-1997
Publication: Bee
Author: KAAREN
Quick Words:
health-massage-therapy-Horne
Full Text:
w/photos: The Hands-On Approach To Wellness
B Y K AAREN V ALENTA
Sally Horne Conklin fell off a horse eight years ago and her life hasn't been
the same since.
"As part of my treatment, I had therapeutic massage and I discovered how
powerful it is," she said. "I continued it for general wellness. Then I
realized I wanted to share what I learned with others."
A former reading tutor at Sandy Hook Elementary School, she was working in the
instructor training department of the Institute for Children's Literature in
West Redding when she started training at the Connecticut Center for Massage
Therapy in Newington.
"It's a two-year program of studies in anatomy, physiology, neurology,
kinesiology as well as intensive hands-on training in both Eastern and Western
traditions," she said. "It involves more than 500 hours of coursework and is
accredited by the American Massage Therapy Association. I am licensed in
Connecticut and New York and nationally certified."
A healing art which is mentioned in historical records as far back as 3,000
years ago in China, therapeutic massage is an official part of the health care
system in nearly every developed country except the United States. That is
slowly changing, however, as some US insurance programs now will cover massage
if it is prescribed by a physician.
The health and fitness movement has prompted interest in therapeutic massage,
as has America's growing emphasis on wellness and prevention. Athletes and
performing artists praise massage for the way it helps to improve performance
and enhance recovery from injuries; doctors increasingly recommend it for
stress relief and as part of treatment programs for chronic pain and other
medical conditions; businesses have begun to recognize its potential to boost
worker productivity and morale.
"Therapeutic massage is so much more than a luxury," Ms Conklin said. "It's an
important means of maintaining health, as well as having healing aspects."
Therapeutic massage provides health benefits on three levels, she said.
On the physical level, it relieves muscle tension, increases circulation,
metabolism and the flow of lymph fluids in the body. On the emotional level,
it provides a feeling of well-being, enhances self image and reduces anxiety.
And it is credited, on the mental level, with helping people achieve a relaxed
state of alertness with decreased mental stress and increased capacity for
thinking and creativity, she said.
"Studies conducted by the Touch Research Institute of the University of Miami
Medical School showed that infants - particularly premature infants -
increased in weight one-third faster than babies that did not receive
massage," she said, and "adults who received a 15-minute `chair' massage
solved mathematical problems in half the time and with half the errors."
Businesses are beginning to recognize the benefits of this alternative health
care procedure and some in the Newtown area have begun to conduct regular
sessions for their employees. Ms Conklin has also been invited to coffee
houses and to health food stores to give demonstrations of the chair massage,
a procedure in which the client remains fully clothed, sitting on a stool or
specially designed massage chair. The finger pressure techniques used by the
therapist are adapted from Swedish, shiatsu and acupressure movements.
The chair massage is considered a "pick-me-up," an adjunct to the traditional
full-body treatment which takes about one hour. A full-body massage costs $40.
Although she occasionally gives half-hour sessions for specific problems, Ms
Conklin said it's usually necessary to work on the whole body.
"Tenderness in an elbow can cause a pain in the neck," she explained.
"Problems usually aren't in just one area."
Being a massage therapist involves more than getting an education and learning
techniques, she said.
"It takes a special touch - a gift. You're also a listener, never offering
advice. I'm only a facilitator, a way to help a clients work out their own
problems."
Massage therapists often volunteer at sites such as hospices, HIV facilities
and rehabilitation institutes. They frequently work in conjunction with
chiropractors, loosening up a patient's muscles in preparation for an
adjustment.
After finishing her training in August, Sally Conklin looked for a good
location to open her office, Health Connection Massage, and eventually decided
on Sandy Hook Center.
"It's a very accessible and growing location," she said. "There's another
massage therapist here and we often help each other. I had an open house in
November and had a surprising response. People are very interested."
"I'm excited about being a therapist in a well-trained, ethical, professional
setting," she said.
Health Connection Massage is located at 111 Church Hill Road. Call 426-0437
for more information.
